Kokoda

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Scenario origin:
Last revision date:
Hartmann

  
First release:
Revision released:

-
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New scenario - under construction.

Historic overview:

An Allied offensive with target to push from Kokoda track.

Article on English Wikipedia

Scenario in dates:
July 21, 1942: In New Guinea - General Horii´s 18th Army lands at Gona, forestalling planned Allied landings.
July 23, 1942: In New Guinea - Advancing up the Kokado Trail, the Japanese 17th Army engaged the Australian defenders near Wosida.
July 29, 1942: In New Guinea - Kokoda falls to the reinforced Japanese troops. Aid which might have helped the Australians stave off the Japanese advance turns back when the planes carrying supplies are told incorrectly that the airfield is in already Japanese hands. At sea, near Gona, American A-24 Banshee dive bombers (ground variant of the SBD Dauntless aircraft) attack a Japanese supply convoy from Lae to Buna. They manage to damage the cargo ship Kotoku Maru and turn the convoy back, however, six of the seven bombers are shot down by Japanese Zeros and anti-aircraft fire, including the leading aircraft of Major Floyd "Buck" Rogers.
August 11, 1942: In New Guinea - Japanese forces take Deniki on the Kokoda Trail from the Australians. The Australian troops are forced to retreat for five miles towards Templeton´s Crossing near the top of the trail.
September 2, 1942: In New Guinea - At Buna, 1000 more Japanese reinforcements land from Rabaul land.
September 16, 1942: In New Guinea - Allied prospects are brighter as they establish local air superiority over Ioribaiwa. This halts the Japanese advance. American reinforcements brought into Port Moresby to join the Australians mean that an effective offense can now be planned.
October 18, 1942: In New Guinea - American forces sent on a parallel trail to help the Australians cut off Japanese retreats down the Kokoda Trail, finally begin to reach Pongani. The trip has proved to be so difficult that the soldiers are in no condition to fight. In addition, the transport of troops by air from Port Moresby to the northern coast has made the land trip unnecessary.
October 19, 1942: New Guinea - In the Musa River Valley, an airport is opened at Fasari. According to missionary Cecil Abel, who selected the place and cut vegetation with the help of the natives, it will soon be named Abel´s Field. The landing of the first C-47 Dakota is witnessed from the jungle of the upper Musa River by American soldiers. It´s a sad sight for them, as they had to walk here on a challenging march along the Kapa Kapa Trail through the Owen Stanley Mountains.
October 21, 1942: In New Guinea - The Australian troops fighting on Kokoda Trail advance to the main Japanese positions in Eora. General MacArthur orders them to speed up their advance.
October 29, 1942: In New Guinea - The Australian forces make a final attack against the Japanese positions at Eora, forcing them to retire before they had completely withdrawn their troops.
November 2, 1942: In New Guinea - Kokoda is recaptured by the Australian 25th Brigade. The reacquisition of the airfield here is especially important as it means supplies can be ferried in by air rather than lugged over the poor terrain of the Kokada Trail.
November 5, 1942: In New Guinea - The Australians attack Oivi. The Japanese decided to fight a rear guard action here to enable the rest of their forces to retire across the Kumusi River.
November 11, 1942: In New Guinea - The Australians face heavy fighting around Gorari.
November 15, 1942: In New Guinea - The construction of rudimentary bridges on the Kusumi River allows an Australian advance to take Wairopi and Ilimow. At Port Moresby, the 30-Mile Drome Airport is being renamed Rogers Airfield to honor the memory of Major Floyd "Buck" Rogers, who died in a bomber on July 29 during an attack on a convoy near Gona.
December 7, 1942: In New Guinea - The Japanese counterattacks threaten the American positions by Buna. The Americans ultimately hold. During the raid on the Japanese air base Buna by American Aircobra fighters, George Welch shot down two Aichi D3A dive bombers and one A6M2 Zero fighter. He thus becomes one of only two American pilots of inefficient Airacobras, who achieved three victories in one flight. He succeeds in the first anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, during which Welch distinguished himself as one of the few fighters that took off and shot down Japanese planes that day.
December 31, 1942: New Guinea - George Strock, a Correspondent for Life magazine, photographs the bodies of dead soldiers after the battle. There are so many bodies that the place becomes called "Maggot Beach". One of the images will be, authorized by the personal permission of President Roosevelt, the first photograph published in the United States during World War II to show American soldiers dead on the battlefield.
January 28, 1943: In New Guinea - The Japanese unsuccessfully attack a detachment of the Australian 3rd Division at Wau.
January 31, 1943: New Guinea - American and Australian forces stop a Japanese advance in the Battle of Wau. The Japanese attempt to destroy this remote Allied base in the New Guinean hinterland by land advance from Salamaua is wrecked by massive airlift of reinforcements.
March 4, 1943: In United States - The 15th Academy Awards are held in Los Angeles. An Oscar for the best documentary film, as the first Australian film, gets the Australian documentary Kokoda Front Line! of war cameraman Damien Parer, who will later be killed by Japanese fire in the Battle of Peleliu. An American film Wake Island gains the nomination for the Outstanding Motion Picture.
June 30, 1943: In New Guinea - Part of the American units from the advanced bases of Mageri and Morobe known as MacKechnie Force including the commander (Archibald Ross MacKechnie) lands in Nassau Bay, not far south of the town of Salamaua, in strong surf. Although the troops of the first and second landing waves manage to get ashore thanks to the guidance of the Australian diversionary Australians who infiltrated jungle to reach the beach, all their boats are lost. The third wave turns back without landing, and the Japanese launch counterattacks to the bridgehead.
July 3, 1943: In New Guinea - Australian forces, advancing from Wau, are heavily engaged by Japanese forces around Mubo. During the day, the Australians link up with the Americans from the Nassau Bay landing force in the Bitoi River region.

Game play matters:

Campaign play:


Scenario data:

Map size: 0 x 0 hexes
0 turns, 0 days per turn
Version: PacAGPG 4, Starting side: Allies, Campaign: Single scenario, Order in campaign: 0.
Allied states:    United Kingdom, USA
Axis states:    Japan
Neutral states:    -
Allies:    defend
Axis:    defend
Experience of Allied purchased units:   
Experience of Axis purchased units:   
Climate region:    Dry area
Weather character in region:    Usually desert or area where was not rain during battle fights.
Game time costingness of scenario:    neurčeno %
(product of units and turns numbers divided by difference between the most long and the most short scenario)
Number of Allied units:
0 units, from them are 0 core units and 0 auxiliary units
0 air units, 0 naval units and 0 ground units
0 of units are loaded to air transport and 0 to naval transport
Transports Air/Naval:
Allies - Axis


0/0 - 0/0
Number of Axis units:
0 units
0 air units, 0 naval units and 0 ground units
0 of units are loaded to air transport and 0 to naval transport

Initial prestige + every turn donation:
Allies / Axis


40 + 0 / 40 + 0
Max number of Allied units:
0 units, from them are 0 core units and 0 auxiliary units
- on start of scenario is possible to purchase 0 unit
   (0 core + 0 auxiliary)
Max number of Axis units:
0 units
- on start of scenario is possible to purchase 0 unit
Transport units:
Allies - air:    not available
Axis - air:    not available
Allies - naval:    not available
Axis - naval:    not available

Victory conditions:

Decisive strategic objects:      0

Major victory:      0
Minor victory:      0

Prestige donation for Major victory:      500
Prestige donation for Minor victory:      200

Battle participated units:

   Complete list of all units on map including coordinates, strenght, experience etc.

 List of types participated units
Allied units:

Axis units:

Map names list:

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